J
Jon_S_1
Guest
I’m sorry but I don’t believe baptists are a subsection of evangelicals.Other posters like Itwin and BeProfOSX can give better answers than I, but to put it concisely, Baptists are a subset of Evangelicals, except for those Baptists who are Fundamentalists.
One area where not all Evangelicals would be in agreement with Baptists is the practice of infant baptism. The Evangelical Congregational church I grew up in has roots in being (very roughly) a Methodist church for the Pennsylvania Germans who didn’t speak English in PA’s early days of European settlement. We practice both infant baptism and adult baptism, calling both a sacrament. The Evangelical Free Church denomination I now attend has Lutheran roots, and again, both types of baptism are practiced.
Baptists, however, only consider believer’s baptism to be complete baptism. So when they baptize someone after a confession of faith, even if that person was baptized as an infant by any other church, Baptists believe that is that person’s first baptism, not a re-baptism.
Baptist trace their roots down a completely different line than evangelicals.
Evangelicals trace back through Scandanavian Protestantism. Where as Baptist go back through England.
Yes they are very similar in many ways but as you know being an EV Free member their is only a loose affiliation with other evangelical churches compared with the hierarchy within different baptist denominations. That’s what I meant by structured earlier. Organizationally structured not religiously or liturgically. In those areas there is not much difference.
But this conversation also goes to show the great difficulty in even defining these terms as they are so varied.